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Community : Most
of Bali's people live in villages of 2,000 to 4,000 people on the
fertile southern slopes of the island. It is usually only a few minutes?
walk from one village to the next by road or through open rice fields.
On the northern coastal strip, the villages are spread along the Java
Sea.
Traditionally, the social organization of
the island was based on the village unit, with each village providing
all needs and functions from birth through cremation. The social
organization of the village is one of the most unique aspects of Bali.
The layout of a Balinese village and the lives of its members, for
example, are closely tied to religion. The center of a village is
usually an ancient and gnarled banyan tree, banyan trees being regarded
as sacred and believed to be the first trees on earth.
A village may have
several banjars, with each banjar having separate allegiances
to certain temples, palaces, and holidays. Even the city of Denpasar is
still rigidly divided into its constituent banjars. All decisions
concerning the walfare and future of its people are made by a
consensus of all married men in the banjar, and each family has some
communal duties to perform for the banjar from time to time.
Almost every
Balinese village has its own major temples. The ?Pura Desa?
("Village Temple") stands near the center of the village. Its functions
are concerned with everyday village matters and ritually prescribed
village gatherings. At the end of the village nearest the sacred
mountains is the ?Pura Puseh.? This is a temple dedicated to
the spirits of the land and of ancient ancestors. (In Bali, the
direction of the mountains is considered heavenly and good while the
direction of the sea is earthly and evil.) The lowest part of a village
or that end nearest the sea contains the ?Pura Dalem? (?Temple of the
Dead?) and the burial grounds.
In the center of
every banjar is the Bale Banjar, or community center. The
banjar is the core of village life. Meetings are held here, village
feasts are prepared, and people gather to play games or just talk. The
communal work is administered from the Bale Banjar. This work consists
of repairing roads, bridges, irrigation canals, and temples and
preparing for cockfights and celebrations. The Balinese do everything in
groups, and bamboo platforms in the banjar, for example, often become
places for villagers to sleep, sardine-like, with their friends.
In contrast to the
egalitarian nature of the village political and economic organization is
the caste system, a mainly social convention based on the Indian ideal.
Outside the banjar system, the three higher castes are held in respect
and are spoken to in a different language. The three higher
castes represent the descendants of the Javanese aristocrats of the 14th
century. There is a caste of priests (Brahmana), a caste of rulers (Ksatria),
and a caste of warriors (Wesia). Ideally the members of these castes
should only marry within their own caste, but this convention is no
longer strictly observed.
Language is a complex matter in Bali.
Basically there are two different Balinese languages. The common or
'low' language is of Malayopolynesian derivation while the 'high'
language of the higher castes is a Javanese court language largely
derived from Sanskrit. A commoner uses the high language when speaking
to a member of a higher caste, but he may be replied to in low
language. A polite, ?middle? language has also emerged. In addition, the
official state language of Indonesian is taught in school.
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